► A rough guide to Extreme E
► What is it? Why should you care?
► CAR talks to Jamie Chadwick and Veloce Racing
Extreme E might be the wacky brainchild of Formula E founder, Alejandro Agag, but there’s more to it than just some off-road racing in electric cars. A star-studded line up of drivers and team owners, far-flung locations and a vision that goes beyond what you think in terms of bringing environmentally friendly motorsport to the masses is all here in one place.
Keep reading for our guide to Extreme E, with intel from racer Jamie Chadwick and the Veloce Racing team.
Who is involved?
It’s a jam-packed line-up of racing heroes and engineering wizards. Jamie Chadwick is driving for eSports-turned-real-racing-team Veloce Racing. Sir Lewis Hamilton – clearly not content with winning seven Formula 1 championships – has his own team, X44, with rallying legend Sébastien Loeb driving. Hamilton’s old teammate, Nico Rosberg also has a team, as does fellow F1 champ Jenson Button – a team owner and a driver for JBXE.
Then there’s the technical genius behind those teams; Adrian Newey, for example, is providing Veloce with technical experience. ‘The fact that Adrian Newey says he’s interested – you don’t get better motorsport credibility than that,’ says Veloce Racing CEO Daniel Bailey. ‘And it made sense for us to speak to Jamie about driving for the team; she’s probably the most prominent female racing driver there is at the moment, and a big advocate for everything we’re about to represent.’
Each team also has one male and one female driver to support gender equality. ‘Something that’s close to my heart – gender equality – is another factor that drew me in,’ says Jamie Chadwick.
Manufacturers are getting in on the action, too; Cupra and German tuner ABT are in on the action together, and Chip Ganassi Racing will use a car designed to look like GMC’s new Hummer EV. Techeetah, of Formula E fame, is also entering.
What car are they racing in?
The Odyssey 21: a standardised, all-electric 4×4 built by Spark Racing Technology (which has developed Formula E’s racers) and with nous from Williams Advanced Engineering. Making 542bhp and capable 0-62mph in 4.5sec, the Odyssey 21 will be given to each team to tart it up in liveries and even change the exterior design.
‘From the tests I’ve done in Formula E, it’s all about energy management,’ says Jamie Chadwick, ‘whereas Extreme E is all flat-out racing, and the way that power is delivered is very different. The main thing is setting it up; we can change a lot within the car,’ she adds, ‘with a combustion engine, the amount of access that teams have means changeability is pretty limited.
‘The Odyssey 21 is, honestly, the most fun I’ve ever had in a race car – it’s spectacular to drive.’
‘One of the biggest challenges for us all has been understanding electric motorsport – it works in a very different way,’ says Veloce Racing team manager, Ian Davies, ‘but when you get into the physical mapping of the car, we can control the torque split of the car here – even if we have things like active differentials in rallying. But once you get to work, it’s not quite as different as maybe you think it is.’
Where are they going?
Five locations are plotted for the 2021 calendar, all named after environmental biomes. ‘Desert’ starts on 3 April in Saudi Arabia, then ‘Ocean’ on 29 May in Senegal, followed by ‘Arctic’ on 28 August in Greenland, with ‘Amazon’ on 23 October in Brazil and ‘Glacier’ in Argentina on 11 December.
Extreme E wants to host races here to visualise climate change, educating viewers in the process. But it’s not just about shining a light – the teams involved also take part in legacy projects to have a positive impact on the footprint they leave; ‘Extreme E is the first platform not trying to retrofit environmental credentials into it. It’s tangibly leaving the world in a better place in the locations that it goes to,’ says Bailey, ‘we’re already planting one million mangroves in Senegal, for example.’
So, it’s just some electric rally racing? Doesn’t sound that green…
There’s more to it than that behind the scenes.
The logistics of the series – transporting cars, equipment and so on – will mostly be done via ship. There’s no air freight allowed in Extreme E – the series claims it can cut down emissions from logistics by two thirds doing it via ship – and even the hub for each race (garages, media and adjudication etc.) is all done from the RMS St. Helena. It’s a repurposed and thoroughly refurbished Royal Mail cargo ship, with Extreme E organisers aiming to turn it into a fully-electric vessel in the future.
That’s not all: the catering has a plant-based partner in Hamilton-backed Neat Burger, and the cars will be charged by hydrogen fuel cell generators when at each race event. Even the water emissions from those hydrogen-fuelled chargers will be used at each race event.
Extreme E also has its own scientific committee, filled with academics from Oxford and Cambridge universities, who advise the organisers on climate research and support those aforementioned legacy projects.
‘There are those who will say ‘what has Extreme E got to do with solving the biggest problem humanity has ever faced – climate change?’’ says Bailey, ‘but the answer to that is doing nothing never solved anything either. If you’re providing a platform for corporations to positively engage in programs and provide one for consumers to engage in the legacy programs, you’re providing a real narrative to help change the whole world.’
‘The demographic of the series is probably going to be much younger,’ adds Davies, ‘and they’re much more aware of climate change and where we’re going. My daughters, for example, will never drive a diesel car – an electric car will be their first. Education has improved where there’s a lot more information about the environment than when I went to school – Extreme E is forcing the change in motorsport faster than any other series.’
Why should I care?
‘Because there’s nothing else like it,’ says Chadwick, ‘it’s going to create some incredible racing. Above and beyond what we have, the teams and drivers within the championship are some of the best in the world – I think that really ties it up to be a fantastic race series.’
‘From a racing enthusiast’s point of view, there are big names involved,’ says Bailey, ‘but the pure adventure aspect of Extreme E… I don’t think sport and entertainment has really created that.’
‘Extreme E is not just writing a new chapter in motorsport,’ says Davies, ‘it’s actually writing a new book.’
Where can I watch it?
Extreme E is regularly announcing tie-ups with broadcasters around the world. For the UK, you can watch each race – starting from 3 April 2021, on BBC iPlayer with highlights on BBC Two.
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